Research & Writing Guides
Statistics
Adherents.com (Preston Hunter)
This site is a comprehensive sources of published statistics on 4,200 world religions, churches, denominations, cultures, religious bodies and faith groups, including geographic data. Data comes from primary sources such as government documents as well as statistics cited in secondary sources.
American Religion Data Archive (Pennsylvania State Univ., funded by the Lilly Endowment, Inc.)
Search and download statistical data as well as the survey questions that generated the statistics. Covers major and minor religions and denominations represented in the United States.
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RHoman
Rebecca Sewell Homan employeed 23 years by GSC.
Archivist, Bibliographer, and Associate Professor.
MLIS 1980, MEd 2007
Religion
The essence of religion and the context of religious beliefs, practices, and institutions
Even a commonly accepted definition of religion has proved difficult to establish, though not for lack of trying. Attempts have been made to find a distinctive ingredient in all religions, such as the numinous, or spiritual, experience, the contrast between the sacred and the profane, and the belief in one or more gods. But objections have been brought against all these attempts, either because the rich variety of religions makes it easy to find counterexamples or because the element cited as central is in some religions peripheral. The gods play a merely subsidiary role, for example, in most phases of Theravada (“Way of the Elders”) Buddhism. A more promising method would seem to be that of exhibiting aspects of religion that are typical of religions, though not necessarily universal, such as the occurrence of the rituals of worship. There are religions, however, in which even worship rituals are not central. Thus, the preliminary task of the student of religion must be to amass an inventory of kinds of religious phenomena.
Even if an inventory of kinds of belief and practice could be gathered so as to provide a typical profile of what counts as religion, some scholars would maintain that the differences between religions are more significant than their similarities. Moreover, in the absence of a tight definition there will always be a number of disputed cases. Thus, some political ideologies, such as communism and fascism, have been regarded as analogous to religion. Certain attempts at a functionalist definition of religion, such as that of the German American theologian Paul Tillich (1886–1965), who defined religion in terms of human beings’ ultimate concern, would leave the way open to count these ideologies as proper objects of the study of religion (Tillich himself called them quasi-religions). Although there is still no agreement on this issue, the frontier between traditional religions and modern political ideologies remains a promising topic of study.
Retrieved October 21, 2009 from Encyclopedia Britannica http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/497151/study-of-religion
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